Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 47, No. 158, Ed. 1 Friday, March 16, 1962 Page: 5 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Khrush -
Continued From Page 1
the United States had invested in
radar detection networks and
other detection systems had been
wasted
He said the United States had
created the radar system to try
and intercept "our Soviet rockets
coming across the Arctic "
"But the new global rocket can
fly around the world and deliver
a blow on any target anywhere in
the world." he said
• Rockets can now fly from
quite a different direction from
that in which the radar has been
aimed."
Shaking his fist, he said
"There is no difference now
whether a town is on the border
of -some frontier, because the
rocket can go anywhere
"It is democratic Wherever
men send it. it goes there. Amei
icans do not understand this "
Khrushchev broke the news in
an address to 6,000 persons as-
sembled for the rally preceding
Sunday's balloting for the
U. S S. R Supreme Soviet
Russia's previous space feats
included putting the first man in
orbit Maj. Yuri Gagarin made
the flight on April 12. 1961 Maj
Gherman S. Titov circled the
earth 17 times on Aug 17. 1961
American astronaut John F
Glenn made his three • orbital
flight last Feb 20
Khrushchev gave no hint of tlie
mission of the new Soviet space
vehicle or whether it might be
used to launch a deeper probe
further into space.
On Feb. 12. 1961. the Soviet
Union tried to reach Venus with
a rocket launched from an or-
biting sputnik
The probe failed to yield ex-
pected results, however, when the
Venusnik radio contact was lost
and it went on past Venus
Khrushchev said today's satel-
lite was launched at 3 p m.
(7 a. m. EST'
“Today I was speaking about a
space shot." he told the meeting
later in his speech "At 3 o'clock
we shot a spacecraft and it is
orbiting the earth."
Khrushchev said Russia's
achievements in spare such as
the flights of cosmonauts Gagarin
and Titov "will fie recorded in
the annals of world history "
'In Manchester. England, a
spokesman for the Jodrell Bank
observatory said no signals had
been picked up from the new
Soviet space shut but added that
no efforts had been made to
locate the vehicle.'
One of the speakers preceding
Khrushchev, an academician, ex
tolled the premier's efforts in
guiding the Soviet Union to vari
ous space successes, including the
launching of space men
At that point Khrushchev ges-
turing with a painting forefinger
broke in and exclaimed:
“Yes. another one has been
•shot up today and has been circ
ling the earth already for three
hours." (This was at approximate
ly 9:30 a.m. cst >
Thunderous applause greeter
the premier's words in the Krem
tin meeting.
It was the first known So vie’
space shot since Maj. Gherman
Titov made 17 orbits of the earth
last Aug. 6.
Khrushchev did not specif v
whether there was a man aboard
the new Soviet space vehicle nor
did lie say how large it was
The announcement came only
slightly more than three weeks
after the United Stales sent Col
John Glenn three limes around
the earth to a safe landing
(Tass, the official Soviet news
agency, in its report ol the an-
nouncement said an "artificial
earth satellite" had been launched
"with a view to continuing the
Soviet program of outer space
research.")
Khrushchev's speech today had
been awaited mainly for what he
might say in the field of foreign
affairs
The Soviet shot came only
throe days before the scheduled
start of U. N. space committer
mootings at which it was ex
pocked possible Sovict-Amcrican
cooperation in various space pro
jeeta might be explored
Noon
Stock
Quotations
Bv I nitrd Press International
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Search --
Supidikj (Ok la) Herald, Friday, March 16, 1962 -Poqe 5
Medics (top) carry stretcher hum: from hip
pu< kv ItfloM, hoH pluhiiui <ould In* given.
Hip pauk u»ed to carry water or gasoline.
Hip, Two, Three, Four
FOR THE FIRST TIME >n hundreds of years,
a new* device lias been developed, by en-
gineers at the Bell Aerosystems Co.. Buf-
falo. N. Y., by which man can parry heavier
loads more comfortably and safely over
longer distances. It is called a Bell hip
pack, and it takes the load off the shoul-
ders. National Guardsmen demonstrating
the hip pack are (top. from left), Tyrone
Aughtinon, Colin Turner and Ronald Pen-
nesi. and (right! Pennesi and Fred Braun
(on stretcher 1. (Central Press)
Soviet --
Continued From Page 1
Candidate ~
(continued from page one'
ballot. Johnson automatically will
get the Democratic nomination.
Johnson contended that Andrews
lives in a trailer at 3908 NW 10
Vice Chairman Jack He wet t ask-
ed Andrews where his relatives
visit him, at tlie Huckins or at the
house trailer
“Just to be frank with you." An-
drews said, "they don't visil with
me.”
"If I wanted (0 call you. what
number would I dial'.'" Ilcwctt
asked.
"I would say the speaker’s of-
fice." Andrews replied
Trailer Is Office
Andrews said the trailer was
used only as an oftice. and it was
later lie said he also used the
speaker's otficc to transact his liq
•or business.
Andrews said he once lived at
the Sheraton Oklahoma Hotel and
still uses it as a mailing address
At another point when asked
where he resides he answered
"Roberts — er, Huckins Hotel.'
Tlie telephone directory on state-
legislators published during the
1961 session lists Andrews' address
at 5201 NW 42
Yuc board gave both sides until
.'. p m Saturday to file briefs and
said it would not decide the case
before Monday
Tlie district has a large concen
tration of Negroes and is predom
inanity Democratic
"I can beat him even if he stays
on the balk*." Johnson said
Guatemala City
Invaded By Army
GUATEMALA CITY <UP!»-
Thc army today seized control of
Guatemala City to halt pillaging
and disorders.
An army communique said the
action was taken to safeguard the
citizenry "in view of tlie events
of recent days" At least 13 per- a)so deman(lc(1 lha)
sons gave been killed in the past
Idaho is the only state in
United States over which
foreign flag ever has flown
-P
McCULLOCH
Chain Saw
SALES l SERVICE
Port* ond Accessories
ALUMINUM
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If E. Leo BA 4-3595
three days in what the govern
ment has classified as Castro-
Communist subversion "
The army warned it would act
the -with the necessary severity" to
no halt street rioting. It banned pub-
I lie assemblies, cut the speed
limit within the city to 20 m p.h..
warned citizens to immediately
follow army orders and forbade
work stoppages.
The statement said "all meas-i
ures" would be taken to halt the |
slaughter and property damage of
recent days.
government was trying to torpedo
the talks here came early in his
news conference at the Geneva
press house.
Russian Impression
"The Soviet Union's impres
sion." lie said, “is that the United
States would like to create such
a condition which would permit
them to go along with their dc
vision to resume nuclear ex
plosions in the atmosphere."
Tsarapkins news conference
had a standing room only aud
ience.
He made his charge just after
Soviet Premier Nikila Khrussh
chcv announced in Moscow that
another Russian space ship was
in orbit.
It came. too. just after the
United States and Russia moved
to work out arrangements for a
series of informal secret meetings
at which neutral nations can ob-
tain full details of tlieir rival
disarmament plans.
The move was initiated by
V K. Krishna Menon. tlie Indian
defense minister who held a
rump session of the eight non-
aligned members of the con
ference.
Informed sources said the idea
was that the United States ;iik|
Russia, as permanent cochairmen,
should start setting up live private
sessions quickly. It was believed
the conference might move into
this phase early next week while*
ill the foreign ministers still are
in Geneva.
Menon was re(»orled to have
told the conference lie thought
little of the Soviet plan to estab
lish nuclear-free zones in Central
Europe. Asia and Africa, because
lie doubted any zone anywhere
would be free in tbe event of a
nuclear catastrophe.
Support for Idea
Several nations came to his
support. The foreign ministers of
Italy. Ethiopia, and the United
Arab Republic backed Menon.
and British Foreign Secretary
Lord Home said Menon had a
good point. Home added that
perhaps the heads of delegations
should meet without their ad-
visers and that no formal record
of the talks should be kept
Brazil came out strongly in
support of the Soviet scheme and
the United
States cancel its plans for nuclear
tests
Brazil and India were the first
of the non-aligned nations to
speak up at the conference
Brazilian Foreign Minister
Francisco San Thiago Dantas out
lined his government's policies as
the conference began considering
States and Russia
Secretary of State Dean Rusk
already has rejected the Soviet
nuclear-free zones idea, particu-
l larly for Central Europe, unless
there is agreement on "effective
disarmament and peace-keeping
measures "
But the proposal appeared to
have a strong attraction for some
of the eight non-aligned nations
at this conference
Dantas spoke approvingly of
tlie 1959 treaty to keep the Ant-
arctic free of nuclear war ma-
terials and of last November's
United Nations resolution declar-
ing the African continent should
be treated as a denuclearized
zone.
"Measures of that kind, what-
ever their efficiency, are evi-
dence that there is a desire to
restrict the area of atomic dan-
Livestock -
(continued from page one!
a m., the judging of calves at 1
p m and the judging of lambs at
1 30 p.m. and the junior judging
contests start at 2 p m.
Tuesday's other event in addi-
tion to the banquet, includes a
red ribbon sale at 2 p.m.
Andy Hesscr of Locust Grove
will act as judge of the show.
Rules and regulations of the
show state that animals do not
have to be registered or pure-
bred Livestock must be shown
by their owner and each contes-
tant must provide his own feed
container and feed All I i v e-
stock will be weighed on the
scales at the Sapulpa district
fairgrounds and the exhibitor
must own the animals at least
• continued from page on*'1
port Service '.MATS', has great
ly increased direct flights from
| the United States to Saigon in re-
cent weeks.
If all aboard were last it would
make this the second worst trag-
edy involving a single cummer
cial airliner, ranking helow only
the DC7C that killed 111 persons
in West Africa 10 days ago
A total loss would bring In
more than 100 the number ol
American fataluies attributable
to the Viet Nam operation Al-
ready 14 Americans have lost
their lives and one soldier is
missing since the American build-
up started last fall.
< S military officials at Clark
Air Force Base in the Philippines
took charge of the massive
search operation
Made Three Stops
The plane, a "Super H" Con
strllation. left Travis AFB Tues-
day It made stopovers at Horn*
lulu and Wake Island before land
mg on Guam.
It took off from Guam Thurs-
day night at 10 56 <7:56 am
EST*.
An hour and 26 minutes later.
Guam's control tower received a
message that the plane was just
northwest of tlie 35.640-foot deep
Mariana Trench and flying at 18.-
000 feet
After that, nothing
There was no report of storms
in the area.
The plane was due at Clark
AFB at 3:16 am today 12 16
p.m. EST Thursday). It had
enough fuel to stay in the air
eight hours and when that time
was up officials presumed it had
crashed at sea
They hoped the pilot was able
to make such a landing that
some or all of the persons aboard
would have been able to get out
safely into life rafts.
Piloted By Hero
The Constellation was piloted
bv Capt Gregory Thomas, hero
of a plane crash in New York
nearly five years ago
On June 21. 1957. Thomas land
ed a Flying Tiger DC6A on a
Legal
Record
DISTRICT t <H KT
Suits Filed
Patsy Ann Conley \s G.ilen El-
mer Howerton. $5.120 50 asked
for alleged personal injuries.
DEATHS
Epps Services
Funeral services for Cecil Epps,
US Aid Of USSR
(ause Of Debate
WASHINGTON (UPI'-A con-
gressional investigator charged to-
day that U S foreign aid of-
ficials did "absolutely nothing"
when they learned American aid
supplies were being used to help
I build a Russian hospital in Cam
hndia
Chairman Porter Hardy Jr.. D-
] Va . of a House watchdog sub-
committee. said his group would
inquire fully into "those who were
derelict in carrying out their re
sponsibilities ”
The use of American materials
Sapulpa resident for many years j and equipment for the multi
who died Tuesday at his horn.-1 m,|l,0n-dollar Soviet aid project
northeast of Sapulpa. will be held Was disclosed at hearings Thurs-
Quotes In
The News
B> United Pres*- InlernaWoaal
LONDON — Nigerian chief Ben
Oluwolo. 77. father of 75 children,
who came to London to visit 14
of his progeny:
"I want to see if they remem-
ber me "
at 10 30 a m Saturday in Ridge-
way Baptist church with Rev
Howard Allen officiating
Burial will be in South Heights
cemetery
Pallbearers will be Ed Masek,
Harry Huffman, and A L Ben
nerfield all of Tulsa. Gerald
Lightfoot. Jim Mammon tree and
Schley Sconiers.
Pair Indicted
For Failing To
Register As Reds
NEW YORK (Upl'—Two high
ranking members of the U. S.
Communist party were indicted
Thursday by a federal grand jury
on charges of failing to register
as Reiis with tlie Justice Depart-
ment
Gus Hall, general party secre
tary. and Benjamin K Davis, na
tional secretary, were taken into
custody by federal marshals but
later released on their own rccog
nizance. Both were expected to
post $5,000 bond today.
Hall and Davis both have
served previous jail teims on
Smith Act convictions
Davis, 58. was indicted on six
counts. Hall. 51. was named in five
counts. Each count carries a max-
imum penalty of five years in
jail and a $10,000 fine for each
day The investigation continued
today.
Jerry M Jackis. a former audi
tor for the aid program, told
| lawmakers he accidentally dis-
covered it when he stopped to
take a closer look at the project
while passing by in July 1958
Jackis said tie saw an Ameri-
can bulldozer and also large
CHAPEL HILL. N C -Evange-
list Billy Graham, okaying fall-
out shelters for the public but not
for himself:
"If I as a minister build a fall-
out shelter I would seem to lack
faith "
WASHINGTON—Astronaut Don-
ald K Slayton, grounded from
space travel because of a heart
murmur-
“I'm very disappointed to say
the leakt."
NEW YORK - Dr Jonas Salk,
developer of the Salk polio vac-
cine. predicting the steady ad-
vance of mankind's struggle
| quantities of cement and asphalt disease:
I hearing the U S foreign aid „If wp werp ^ (ook back to
symbol In some cases, he* said ^ prt.scnl the vantage
tiad been covered p^, ^ ((w vcars (rom now- we
would undoubtedly see that the
the symbol
over.
The aid agency in a statement
later said the U. S. and Cam-
bodian governments have an in-
formal agreement prohibiting the
use of American aid on any pro-
tect identified with the Commun-
ist bloc "and we believe this is
being upheld ”
But it said that after U. S
equipment is used on a project,
it often is turned over to the
recipient government without
further restrictions.
problems posed by many of
man s physical ills had gradually
been solved "
The world's largest offshore
fishing grounds are the Grand
Banks, off Newfoundland.
ger 'and' are an expression of
the refusal of any attempt to le- *0 days before the show,
gitimize the use of indiscriminate
mass destruction weapons.” Dan-
tas said.
Opposed Soviet Testing
The two "politburo" members
were picked up by five marshals
and taken to the detention pen at
the federal courthouse without re-
sistance
The Communist party, which
was itself indicted last Dec. 1 for
failing to register as a subvers-
ive organization, issued a state-
ment calling the arrests “a blow
to political liberties of all Amer-
The Brazilian saM his govern-
ment had expressed disapproval
of the Soviet resumption of nu-
i clear testing last October and
"similarly expressed the wish
that the decision — still condi-
tional — by the United States to „
resume such tests might not be
'■arried out."
Only one animal may be sold
by an exhibitor in auction and the
first weight will be the final
weight George Maynard, county
agent, said if the money appropri-
ated from the sponsors of the
Creek County Livestock Show is
insufficient, cash premiums will
be discounted pro rata.
All 4-H and FFA exhibitors,
their coaches and instructors will
banquet at the high
school cafeteria at 6:30 p.m Mon-
mudflat of Jamaica Bay rather] lay the regulation law is vio-
than try to return to the airport lated
and risk crashing in a populated
area All nine crewmen aboard
escaped with their lives
Last week Thomas. 48. was ma-
rooned on his boat with a friend
for three days battling a fierce
Atlantic storm off Red Bank. N.J.
Air Force planes from the Phil-
ippines. Guam and Okinawa were
thrown into the search along with
ships and planes of the U S
Navy's 7th Fleet and the Coast
Guard.
They criss-crossed a great sec-
tion of ocean where it was be-
lieved most likelv that the Con-
stellation went down
Officials reported the search
was blessed with good visibility
This was the second mishap in-
volving a Flying Tiger plane
within 24 hours. A transport fly-
ing military cargo crashed and
burned Thursday at Adak. in the
Aleutian Islands, killing one man
OIL STOCK UP
WASHINGTON <UPI' — Crude|
oil stocks in Oklahoma for the
week ended March 10 were 14.400.-|
otHi barrels, up 163.000 barrels
from the previous week National-
ly. stocks decreased 2.082.000 to
236,814.000 barrels.
^oe S^tecil
THERE SHOULD BE
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YOUNG HEN
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Jdav presented bv the Sapulpa
Ac are unflinchingly opposed (-hambrr o( ((,mmcrce
to these tests which we formally
condemn." Dantas declared
Dantas proposed an immediate
study by a subcommittee of the
nuclear negotiator Arthur Dean
and British Minister of State Jo-
seph Godber. Tsarapkin also
■onferonce to determine ,,lhe||uried (lown ,.rosldent Kennedy's
minimum degree et inspection in
loco 'on site' which would be in-
dispensable" to police a ban of
underground tests
The Big Three ministerial
meetings, at which Rusk. Soviet
proposal for provisions to safe-
guard against secret preparations
for testing.
Most diplomats believed that
this blunt Soviet action ended all
Foreign Minister Andrei Gromy- lopes of getting • test bun hi
ko and British Foreign Sccrctaiy l°rc *1"' 1 nited States resumes
lard Home tried futilelv for sov ; tmosphciic tests in the mid-Pa-
'■rnl days to ease the deadlock c'^c month Kennedy had
over Berlin and nuclear testing. I offered to suspend the tests if an
have been suspended indefinitely, effective treaty were signed be-
These informal sessions took l°re then,
nlace outside the formal confer- There was no immediate for-
en(.(, | mal comment by either the Unit-
Tlie Western powers were re- States or Russia on the gen-
norted somewhat discouraged by '*ral disarmament plans each pro-
the curt manner in which Soviet ^uted •<> the conference Thurs-
day. Initial reaction from each
•■ide was that the other's plan did
nuclear negotiator Semvon K
Tsarapkin Thursday night reject-
ed two major concessions the no* contain anything new-
United States offeied in an at-1 T^e United States called for a
tempt to break the nuclear test ^ P°r cent reduction in world
Public
Records
MUNICIPAL COURT
Two cases were on the munici-
pal court docket Friday morning
John llollingshed. Mounds, for-
feited $6 for running a slop sign
Robert Huff. 730 S. Apple, had
a charge of failing to yield the
right of way dismissed
CRIMINAL CASE
The following criminal case
was handled by County Attorney
Clyde Patrick's office:
Lee Junior Mayfield. Bristow
driving to the left side in a mark-
ed zone.
B.F.Goodrich
19 South Main
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arms and nuclear delivery sys-j
terns in three years and a global I
ban deadlock
Would Cut Inspections
One was an American offer fo warning system to prevent a warl
abandon its longtime insistence ^y surprise or accident,
that underground nuclear tests be ^ov'el 1 nlon aKa'n offered |
excluded from the test ban be-
cause of the difficulty in detect-
ing them The other was an offer
to reduce by an unspecified
number, the on-site inspections
each year in Russia to guard
opposing disarmament proposals I against bootleg blasts
tabled Thursday by the United I At a meeting with chief U S
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Livermore, Edward K. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 47, No. 158, Ed. 1 Friday, March 16, 1962, newspaper, March 16, 1962; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1492641/m1/5/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.